IBM, Delft University of Technology Collaborate on Smarter Water Research

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Delft, Netherlands
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04 Oct 2010:
Together with IBM (NYSE: IBM), Delft University of Technology (TU Delft) is researching how technology and analytics can be applied to complex water systems to minimise the risk of flooding. The results stand to impact both the Dutch water system as well as other regions with similar complex water systems such as the Sacramento River Delta in the United States and the South-North Water Transfer Project in China, as well as for reservoir management in the Alps.

The Dutch water system is an extensive network of rivers, canals, pumps, pumping stations, locks, dams and reservoirs. The total length of the Dutch waterways is about 2200 kilometers, transporting roughly 120 trillion litres of river and rain water each year. By applying analytics to the vast amounts of data gathered from across this system, researchers expect to identify patterns and trends that will enable improvements in overall water management with benefits including reduced flooding and improved water quality.

By linking together and analyzing disparate information flows, water managers will be able to gain real-time insight into the water system. For example, information from sensors in rivers and dikes can be linked to meteorological information. Advanced algorithms and analysis software will then calculate the impact of events such as extreme rainfall. This information will enable water boards, municipalities and the Directorate-General for Public Works and Water Management in the Netherlands to model the results of different interventions into the system, thereby aiding the decision-making process.

"We expect that the results of this research will make an important contribution to the implementation of the recommendations made by the Delta Commission," said Djeevan Schiferli of IBM's Centre of Excellence for Water Management in the Netherlands. The Commission's report examines different problems independently of one another, such as fresh water from the IJsselmeer lake, nature conservation/restoration in the south-western Delta area and high water in rivers.